Booze and Marriage Go Together Like a Horse and Carriage

by guest on January 18, 2010

45823-Royalty-Free-RF-Clipart-Illustration-Of-A-Romantic-Bride-And-Groom-Toasting-With-Champagne-On-Their-Honeymoonby RhoRho

I’ve always said that I don’t trust people who don’t drink (yes, even out loud), so it’s only fitting that I’m married to someone who shares my affection for the booze.  We’re married with children, a dog, a mortgage and a ton of bills, and we do what most parents we know do to take the edge off at the end of the day: we drink. We don’t take any prescription or street drugs, we don’t smoke cigarettes or gamble away the family’s money on slot machines. We drink.

Sometimes my husband, who typically drinks quite responsibly, can get off his game. A few times a year, he gets around an old buddy, starts mixing it all up like a kid in a candy store, and gets good and shit-faced. He starts with vodka and Red Bulls, then goes to beer, then maybe some of my wine. He loses any shred of common sense. But me, I’m too fuzzy myself in those situations to notice, and sometimes, he doesn’t even appear to be all that drunk. But the next morning, he awakens, throws his arm across his forehead, lifts one knee up toward the ceiling, and coughs a little bit. This is when I know. The Hangover.

Now, normal people like me awaken, acknowledge the Hangover, moan a little bit, and get on with it. We have kids to feed, duties to perform, coffee to make. Not my husband. He is famous for the all-day hangover, and when he “pulls one,” as I have come to call it, he is either in the bed or hugging the toilet until about seven o’clock at night, when he suddenly pops up, takes a hot bath, and starts cleaning the house or something crazy like that.  He may not drink for a week or two after a really bad one, and I get lonely for my drinking buddy. If I do suffer from overindulging, I am out of commission (meaning wine) for one, two days, tops. What if I pulled an all-dayer, I ask?

When I see the first sign – the arm flinging over the forehead, I get furious. And I don’t mean furious on the inside, I mean steaming mad and threatening him with his life.  It’s not like, at the time, he has much control over his body, but my point is that, by God, he should’ve used his head last night and stuck to Michelob Ultra. I can’t be the booze police and have my own fun too! He has to be in fresh air to even try to recover, so on the last one, he got his ass up and out of the bed and into the yard, where he chopped wood in the rain… as he puked. What must the neighbors have thought? “That bitch runs a tight ship,” that’s what they thought.

At this point, yes, the booze is our stress relief, but when we think about the thousands of dollars that could be sitting cozily in the bank, we do question ourselves. And those dozens of hours lost on all those Saturdays, while the kids are asking, “Mommy what’s wrong with Daddy?” are irreplaceable, and he lost them to something as ridiculous as bingeing like a frat boy.

I do get nervous before a night out, and start threatening him before he even thinks about mixing. He doesn’t want The Hangover any more than I do. And me, I want a husband I can take places. But to his credit, it has dwindled down to only a few times a year.

We don’t really see ourselves ever giving it up totally, and we question what we would do if there were ever an ultimatum. Spouse or alcohol? Could the former even cope with the other if not for the latter? Make sense? So for now, we’re trying to be responsible drinkers, take taxis so the DHS doesn’t come get our kids, and enjoy it rather than depend on it. We’re trying, I said. Our own little Days of Wine and Roses.

RhoRho is a mother of two, wife, freelance writer, blogger, kid taxi service, budget traveler and wine enthusiast, among other things. She has been freelance writing here and there for several years, with writing for a magazine like National Geographic Traveler being one of her many ultimate goals. Rhonda lives with her husband, two kids, a Welsh Corgie and a Dwarf bunny, and travels whenever possible. Her blogs are: Momwhodrinksandcusses and Wine4poorishfolk

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{ 4 comments… read them below or add one }

Kitty January 20, 2010 at 4:19 pm

Wow, I can so relate to your post! The thing with my husband however is he gets mean, angry and full of hate. Lucky for me he only drinks on his 2 days off a week, but man, when he drinks he really drinks. He doesn’t get “crazy” every time but when he does the after math takes awhile to get over. Then he’s sorry and making excuses and vows to “drink better” next time. He has even gone as far as taking a day off from work just to “prove” that he can be nice and drink better. And yes it works, one or two times. Then it starts again, the same damn bullsh*t.

Me, I drink my wine every night of the week. I enjoy it and don’t want to stop. But in the days following one of my hubby’s drunks I consider the thought of just not drinking at all. If I were to tell him “no, we are not going to drink” he’d go along with it. But then I think “well, what else is there to do?” And also, would we even like each other anymore, sitting here sober with each other? And so it goes, on and on.

I also think of us as our own little “Days of Wine & Roses.” I could go on and on with this post but I’m still worn out from last night which was yet another of hubby’s crazy times. He’s finally off to work and I lick my wounds. Not physical wounds but mental ones which are truly just as bad. Thanks for sharing your story and for your honesty…most people just don’t want to admit their woes from drinking.
Kitty

RhoRho January 20, 2010 at 7:44 pm

Kitty, damn I feel for you. I think I made my hubs out to be a bit worse than he is because honestly, it’s like 3x a year … at least last year! But he is usually really nice, and really annoying on his little frat boy binge! But I’m no better. The only thing I am better at is the hangover- as in I rarely have one. He calls me “rockstar” because of this ability. But really, one of us simply HAS to get our asses up and deal with life when we’re in that predicament! Leave it to the WOman, baby!

Maliah January 22, 2010 at 3:33 pm

That is the funniest post!! I can relate. Only, my stories aren’t so funny. Rho Rho, you’re an amazing writer.

Susan January 23, 2010 at 9:45 am

My husband rarely drinks but he’s smart enough not to say one word to me when I do. Which is always. He’s even smart enough to buy the wine if asked. Excellent post, Rho Rho!!

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